Volume 22, Issue 5 p. 37-54
Original Articles

Reaping the Economic Benefits of Decarbonization for China

Fei Teng

Associate Professor, Institute of Energy, Environment and Economy, Research Center for Contemporary Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China

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Frank Jotzo

Corresponding Author

Associate Professor and Public Policy Fellow, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia

Associate Professor and Public Policy Fellow, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. Email: frank.jotzo@anu.edu.au.Search for more papers by this author
First published: 15 September 2014
Citations: 14

Some of this work benefited from a grant from the Australian Government through the “Australia‐China Research Program on Climate Change Mitigation Policy.” For helpful comments we thank Alun Gu, Feng Shenghao, two anonymous referees and the editor of this special issue.

Abstract

China needs to reduce its carbon emissions if global climate change mitigation is to succeed. Conventional economic analysis views cutting emissions as a cost, creating a collective action problem. However, decarbonization can improve productivity and provide co‐benefits that accord with multiple national policy objectives. We track China's progress in reducing the emissions intensity of the economy, and construct a macro scenario with China's carbon emissions peaking in the 2020s. Investment in greater energy productivity and economic restructuring away from heavy industries can bring productivity gains, and decarbonization of energy supply has important co‐benefits for air pollution and energy security. Combined with lower climate change risks and the likelihood that China's actions will influence other countries, this suggests that cutting carbon emissions is not only in China's self‐interest but also in the global interest. To properly identify the true costs and benefits of climate change action requires new thinking in economic analysis.

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